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Bullet-point briefing: Eugene Kaspersky

Bullet-point briefing: Eugene Kaspersky

By:  Greg Meckbach  On: 29 Sep 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

The head of the Moscow-based security software firm dropped in to speak with IT World Canada during a tour of Toronto. Get the lowdown on his cloud strategy

Though EMC has acquired RSA and Symantec bought Veritas, Eugene Kaspersky plans to continue developing most of his software in-house.

Kaspersky Labs, based in Moscow, makes Open Space Security, Mail and Gateway Security, Internet Security 2009 and other security software. This week he sat down with ComputerWorld Canada and shared his thoughts on network security, malware and what the future holds for his company.

*He disagreed with a recent Gartner opinion saying enterprise pay too much for anti virus.

“What we see is computer threats change year by year. In the past it was just the hooligans, teenagers developing computer viruses. Now there are computer criminals who develop malware just for financial gain. They develop malware to steal information, to get access to bank accounts, to inject malware into the corporate environments. How do anti-virus companies respond to that? That depends on how good the companies are with the technologies. To fight with cyber criminals, who are high-end technical guys, we have to develop the high-end technologies. Believe me, the development of such systems and supporting them is quite a big investment. So I don’t agree that enterprises pay too much for anti-malware systems.”

More in Network World Canada

No excuse for lack of encryption

*The problem of spoofing goes beyond yesterday’s cross-site request forgery discovery.

“There are so many criminal businesses on the Internet that spoof Web sites, hijacking the data there. It’s just one piece of the whole landscape of criminal businesses on the Internet, and I think that the most interesting cases are not like this one. The most curious thing on the Internet is the fact that sometimes criminals, they play on the stock exchange with the help of malware. They start to play on the stock exchange on one hand from their own company and on the other hand from a hijacked company. If you want to inject some malware into some computers you don’t need to develop malware by yourself. You can request it and criminals will develop it for you. They will publish their price lists for malware. There is technical support, there are terms of service.”

*He touted the application control feature of Kaspersky Internet Security 2009.

“Actually our 2009 products were just consumer products. We test our new technologies on the consumer market. These new technologies are a revolution in the anti-malware industry because there’s a new approach with this protection. Instead of blacklist protection, we have application control which has a black list and a white list and keeps basically systems in their place. Second, we have the security network approach where we have reputation servers in the cloud. So we’re introducing new technologies which none of our competitors have in their product line and the next step is to have these technologies and more technologies in our corporate product line."


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Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach is editor of Network World Canada and has worked for ComputerWorld Canada, Communications & Networking and Computing Canada.

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